Social media marketing snafus are all too common in an era when entrepreneurs go to great lengths to get their businesses seen online. But small business owners who can recognize the pitfalls of these digital platforms before they hit "Post" are better poised to grow their business while maintaining its good name.
Keep reading to identify some of the most common social media marketing mistakes; and how to avoid them.
Focusing on one social media network to the exclusion of all others
Facebook is still a social media giant, but it might surprise you to know that it's used by 68 percent of American adults, compared with the 73 percent that uses YouTube, according to a Pew Research study.
The stratospheric success of YouTube, the flight of young users to Instagram and Snapchat and recent Facebook News Feed changes that prioritize personal over business content prove that not even businesses with large follower counts on a single social media site can assume that they have a captive audience. To accommodate an audience that will flit to and from multiple social media platforms, you should create and maintain a business profile on multiple social media platforms.
Going without a social media marketing strategy
Posting random photos, videos and text willy-nilly to every social media platform for which you have a business profile is a fruitless exercise that may win you a few followers in the short-term but will not sustain the growth of your social media channels over the long-run. You need to first develop a concrete social media marketing strategy that covers, at a minimum, the five W's:
- Who is the target of your social media content? This is your target audience.
- What will you be posting? Nail down both the types of content and the theme and specific message that the content will convey.
- When will you post? Decide how often and at what times of day you will post.
- Where? Determine which social media platforms you will post on and to which platforms you will post specific types of content.
- Why? Set an overall goal you want your content to achieve. Example: Gain 1,000 followers or sell x units of a product.
Censoring negative reviews or feedback
The trust that exists between a business and a customer is easily broken if you delete negative business reviews or feedback that you assume will hurt your business. In truth, the act of censorship will do far more damage to your brand than the feedback itself.
There's no doubt that some forms of negative feedback, such as hate speech or fake business reviews, are fair game for deletion. But when you receive constructive criticism that is valid, don't delete it and ignore it; publicly acknowledge it and figure out how to use it to improve your product or service.